Thursday, February 13, 2025
Areas surrounding New Mexico's Aztec Ruins National Monument, and other monuments, are at risk of losing federal protections from the "Unleashing American Energy" executive order. The Trump administration has directed the U.S. Department of Interior to review all oil, gas and minerals on public lands.
Daniel Hart, director of Clean Energy and Climate Resiliency Policy with the National Parks Conservation Association, says the order could enable more fossil-fuel production on federal lands - including where development is now banned. He notes water often runs through these lands.
"Mining just next to them already is problematic - same with oil and gas. We have runoff - an unfortunate disaster can cause cleanup efforts. There's still streams and waters in the Southwest that are unusable by people and animals," he explained.
The order aims to solidify the U.S. as a global energy leader by removing what it calls burdensome regulations. But Hart noted that the U.S. was the world's leading oil producer under the Biden administration and says lands owned by the public should not be under consideration for more extraction.
Wildlife - already struggling with climate change - also are affected by drilling and mining, which Hart says can demolish established corridors and reduce food sources. In addition, he notes visitors to parks and monuments could feel the effects of more fossil fuel activities.
"This development even on the border of a park or a monument is problematic, but this is looking at even removing those borders to increase that leasing and it's the haze in the air and it's the noise and the lights that get rid of those 'dark sky-night sky' designations in many of these parks," he continued.
Twenty-four million acres of public land are already leased to oil and gas companies for extraction, with more than 12 million acres hosting active sites. In 2017, the Trump administration issued a similar review which included the state's Rio Grande del Norte National Monument and the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument. Neither made the list for increased activities.
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